Materials & Design (Oct 2018)

Design and fabrication of melt electrowritten tubes using intuitive software

  • Erin McColl,
  • Jürgen Groll,
  • Tomasz Jungst,
  • Paul D. Dalton

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 155
pp. 46 – 58

Abstract

Read online

This study approaches the accurate continuous direct-writing onto a cylindrical collector from a mathematical perspective, taking into account the winding angle, cylinder diameter and length required for the final 3D printed tube. Using an additive manufacturing process termed melt electrowriting (MEW), porous tubes intended for tissue engineering applications are fabricated from medical-grade poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL), validating the mathematically-derived method. For the fabricated tubes in this study, the pore size, winding angle and printed length can all be planned in advance and manufactured as designed. The physical dimensions of the tubes matched theoretical predictions and mechanical testing performed demonstrated that variations in the tubular morphology have a direct impact on their strength. MEWTubes, the web-based application developed and described here, is a particularly useful tool for planning the complex continuous direct writing path required for MEW onto a rotating, cylindrical build surface. Keywords: Additive manufacturing, 3D printing, Electrohydrodynamic printing, Biomaterials, Polycaprolactone